Camera

The Incredible 2's camera app looks and works like it does on other HTC phones. I was surprised by how quickly the app can switch between shooting stills and video, it's virtually instantaneous. Switching between front and rear facing cameras is pretty quick, but it is a two-tap process: you have to first bring up the settings menu then select switch camera.

The rear facing camera has an 8MP sensor (the same s5K3h1gx sensor from the Sensation) augmented by two LEDs that act as a flash. Image quality is predictably...ok. If you're looking at web resolutions, the Droid Incredible 2 can put out some pretty nice looking images. However viewed at their native 3264 x 1952 resolution the captures range from disappointing to great. The rear sensor seems to have occasional problems with very sunny days. Low light photography is possible with incredibly bright LED flash however quality is still about average for a high end smartphone.

Not sure. I like the SLCD on my Glacier just fine. Sure, blacks aren't quite as black as they were on my old Galaxy S, but the color balance is much nicer and white webpages don't slaughter my battery.Reply

I like the options, but Droid has some identification problems. Apple doesn't come out with a lot of phones, but when it does, it's easy to tell it's an iPhone and what version it is. Part of having a smartphone is having those bragging rights.

Droid has many options and features, but their products are becoming more and more ambiguous by the time they hit the street. Combine that with all the different version names and it makes it tougher for consumers to remember what one they really wanted.

I think this problem begins with the manufacturer. So while I might like this, or another phone, I hope I write it down because a month from now, I doubt I'll remember its name.Reply

I have to admit - I don't see the real need for dual-core on a phone. What's it going to do for you? My lowly iPhone 3GS is already pretty darn smooth, and has no trouble browing the web, doing email, playing games. Maybe there are apps that can use it, but the only thing I can think of that really needs the dual GPU would be hardcore games.Reply

I wonder how well your 3GS would play my extensive .mkv library consisting of mostly 1080p series and movies. Or how well it would be able to browser flash websites or use google docs etc. :-)Just because it's good enough for you doesn't mean it is for everyone else. If everyone thought like you, we'd still go around with 30km/h trains and ride on horses most of the time.Reply

Every HTC phone since that has just felt cheaper. I especially loved the metal battery cover with a dedicated release lever; and I wish HTC would incorporate that design into other phones they make instead of the plastic-rip-off cover that they've been going with lately.

I also liked the fact that it had a dedicated camera button and an optical trackpad, things that HTC has elected to delete from this generation of android phones. I know a lot of people are going to disagree with me on the trackpad, but I found it useful as a wake method (instead of having to push the power button on the top), as a D-pad for quickly repositioning the text input cursor, and as a notification LED.Reply